Emergent Properties of an Organic Semiconductor Driven by its Molecular Chirality

Chiral molecules exist as pairs of nonsuperimposable mirror images; a fundamental symmetry property vastly underexplored in organic electronic devices. Here, we show that organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) made from the helically chiral molecule 1-aza[6]­helicene can display up to an 80-fold d...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS nano 2017-08, Vol.11 (8), p.8329-8338
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Ying, Rice, Beth, Shi, Xingyuan, Brandt, Jochen R, Correa da Costa, Rosenildo, Hedley, Gordon J, Smilgies, Detlef-M, Frost, Jarvist M, Samuel, Ifor. D. W, Otero-de-la-Roza, Alberto, Johnson, Erin R, Jelfs, Kim E, Nelson, Jenny, Campbell, Alasdair J, Fuchter, Matthew J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chiral molecules exist as pairs of nonsuperimposable mirror images; a fundamental symmetry property vastly underexplored in organic electronic devices. Here, we show that organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) made from the helically chiral molecule 1-aza[6]­helicene can display up to an 80-fold difference in hole mobility, together with differences in thin-film photophysics and morphology, solely depending on whether a single handedness or a 1:1 mixture of left- and right-handed molecules is employed under analogous fabrication conditions. As the molecular properties of either mirror image isomer are identical, these changes must be a result of the different bulk packing induced by chiral composition. Such underlying structures are investigated using crystal structure prediction, a computational methodology rarely applied to molecular materials, and linked to the difference in charge transport. These results illustrate that chirality may be used as a key tuning parameter in future device applications.
ISSN:1936-0851
1936-086X
DOI:10.1021/acsnano.7b03540